Abstract

Between December 1946 and December 1948, and January to March 1950, 150 elephants made available in the course of control work carried out by the Uganda Game Department were examined in greater or less detail according to circumstances. Eighty-one were females, of which sixty-seven were adult and thirty-one had an embryo in the uterus. All the dissections were carried out in the field, and the present account includes observations on the terrain, the food of the elephant, and other aspects of its ecology. Linear measurements of the carcasses and photographs of the molar teeth provide a guide to the age of specimens. Tusk growth is nearly similar in males and females until puberty, after which those of females generally cease to grow. The reproductive organs of the male are briefly described; those of the female are described in more detail, and discrepancies between existing accounts are considered in the light of this relatively extensive series of specimens. The mode of formation of the ovarial sac is unusual and is described from foetal, neonatal and adult specimens. There is marked hypertrophy of the interstitial tissue of the foetal gonads during the later stages of gestation. Breeding occurs at all times of year, but mating is possibly more frequent in the period December to March than at other times. Both sexes reach maturity at 8 to 12 years, and the female continues to breed until old age. Parturition is followed by a lactation anoestrus, after which the female undergoes a number of brief oestrous cycles until pregnancy ensues, lactation being continued throughout the subsequent gestation period. The interval between parturition and subsequent conception is normally of the same order of duration as the gestation period, and the normal calving interval appears to be rather less than four years. The ovarian cycle of the adult is characterized by the occurrence of multiple ovulation and the presence of many apparently active and histologically indistinguishable corpora lutea in both ovaries at all the stages of pregnancy which were encountered. It is probable that the corpus luteum of pregnancy develops from one of a number of follicles which ovulate under the same hormonal stimulus, and that it persists together with the accessory corpora lutea, some of which arise from follicles which ovulate and some from follicles which luteinize without ovulating. The corpora lutea are replaced about mid-pregnancy by a second set, which are formed by the luteinization of all the follicles with antra in both ovaries; some at least of the larger ones ovulate while many smaller ones do not. Follicular growth is suppressed in the later stages of pregnancy. The cycle of events bears some resemblance to that which occurs in the mare, and the comparison is discussed in detail. The ovarian periphery is characterized by numerous subsurface crypts and papillose projections which increase the area of the germinal epithelium. A description of the placenta and foetal membranes is in preparation, and preliminary study reveals a striking similarity to Hyrax, particularly in the quadri-lobulate allantois. The findings are discussed with reference to the phylogenetic position of the genus, the probable role of the corpus luteum in pregnancy, and the significance of the results in relation to the conservation of existing wild elephant populations.

Footnotes

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